When we develop healing relationships with clients, we often collaborate with their family in order to grasp an accurate understanding of their goals, meaning of illness, and their risks or vulnerabilities (Orchard, Sonibare, Morse, Collins & Al-Hamad, 2017). More times than not, family members are the ones who provide support and care for our clients when they return home, therefore we need to acknowledge their role in client care (Doane & Varcoe, 2015). Throughout my practice I have witnessed the gap between nurses and their clients family members. I’ve heard nurses use the term “difficult” to describe their client’s families, as they view the family as an obstacle rather than an asset. An example used earlier elaborates on how I worked with a family that would pose a number of ongoing questions about their ill family member.…